Selected Events (06/20) + Museum Special Exhibitions: Manhattan’s 5th Avenue

Today’s TOP 10 – SATURDAY, JUNE 20, 2015

“We search the internet everyday looking for the very best of What’s Happening, primarily on Manhattan’s WestSide, so that you don’t have to.”
We make it as easy as 1-2-3.  (click on links for complete event info)

Music, Dance, Performing Arts
Blue Note Jazz Festival
> Falu’s Bollywood Orchestra
Highline Ballroom, 431 W16th St. / 7PM, $20-$45
“Falu’s Bollywood Orchestra combines the timeless elegance of Bollywood’s golden age music with a modern inventive style to create a musically and visually stunning treat.”

> Abdullah Ibrahim & Ekaya
Blue Note Jazz Club, 131 W3rd St. / 8PM +10:30PM, $30 +$45
“blending beguiling South African rhythms with rich Ellingtonian textures, Ekaya reflects the dual identities of its leader.” (NewYorker)

Chelsea Music Festival:
> Festival Jazz FINNale – the Tuomo Uusitalo Trio
St. Paul’s German Lutheran Church, 315 W22nd St. / 7:30PM, $68
“Since releasing his award-winning debut album “TRIO” in 2012, Finnish jazz pianist Tuomo Uusitalo is taking NYC jazz scene by storm.”

Ann Hampton Callaway (through June 20 and June 25)
54 Below, 254 W54th St., / 7PM, $55-$75
“Ms. Callaway has a phenomenal, multirange voice that has only grown stronger as she has evolved from a lachrymose piano-bar entertainer with a coloratura register into a blues and jazz powerhouse.” The New York Times

> The World Champion Judah Friedlander
Carolines on Broadway, 1626 Broadway / 7:30PM, $33
“the 30 Rock star brings his World Champion schtick to Carolines for a night of hilariously skewed machismo.” TONY

> Tony Bennett and Lady Gaga (through June 23, no Sunday)
Radio City Music Hall, 1260 6th Ave / 8PM, $60-$150, tough tkt, may need to stubhub it
an unlikely duo make some beautiful jazz standards music.

Smart Stuff / Other
(Lectures, Discussions, Book Talks, Literary Readings, Classes, Food & Drink, Other)
> Lions, Tigers and Brews 
Central Park Zoo, 5th Ave & 64th St. / 8-11PM, $49-$69
drink craft beer with the animals. unlimited 3oz samples from 100+ craft breweries.

> Ellsworth Kelly (last chance)
Matthew Marks Gallery , 522 W22nd St / 10AM-6PM, FREE
“much of the work is about simplicity, recycling old ideas and Kelly signatures in ways that make it feel astonishingly vital.”

Elsewhere, but these sure look worth the detour:
> Mermaid Parade
“Coney Island’s annual Mermaid Parade, one of the largest art parades in the country, returns to celebrate New York’s creative spirit and seaside rituals with handmade costumes and uninhibited pageantry.

The procession begins at West 21st Street and Surf Avenue, then makes its way to West 10th Street and eventually south to the boardwalk.
At 1 p.m., coneyisland.com; FREE.” (NYT/SpareTimes)

> Nolafunk Crawfish and Music Festival
Governors Beach Club, Governors Island / 4PM, $35,
General admission + Crawfish Platter, $55.
hear New Orleans bands Flow Tribe, New Breed Brass Band and Papa Mali, as well as the tribute band James Brown Dance Party.

Have time for only one event today? Do this:

> Festival Jazz FINNale – the Tuomo Uusitalo Trio
St. Paul’s German Lutheran Church, 315 W22nd St. / 7:30PM, $68

maxresdefault“Since releasing his award-winning debut album “TRIO” in 2012, Finnish jazz pianist Tuomo Uusitalo is taking NYC jazz scene by storm. He will be joined by American bassist Myles Sloniker and Finnish drummer sensation Olavi Louhivuori to close the 2015 Festival with original compositions and inspired arrangements.

A tasting menu of wild, foraged Finnish cuisine curated by master Chef Sami Talberg will follow as the 2015 Chelsea Music Festival rings out its celebration of the great musical, artistic and culinary heritage of Finland. Includes Gala Reception and an open bar.”

Bonus – Music Venues:
So much fine live music every night in this town. These are a few of my favorite music venues on Manhattan’s WestSide. Check out who’s playing tonight:
City Winery – 155 Varick St. / citywinery.com, 212-608-0555
Joe’s Pub @ Public Theater – 425 Lafayette St. / joespub.com, 212-967-7555
Metropolitan Room – 34 W22nd St. / metropolitan room.com, 212-206-0440
Le Poisson Rouge – 158 Bleecker St. / lepoissonrouge.com, 212-505-3474
Beacon Theatre – 2124 Broadway @ 74th St. / beacontheatre.com, 212-465-6500
B.B. King’s Blues Bar – 237 W42nd St. / bbkingblues.com, 212-997-2144
Special Mention:
Caffe Vivaldi – 32 Jones St. nr Bleecker St. / caffevivaldi.com, 212-691-7538
a classic, old jazz club in the Village, Caffe V often surprises with a wonderfully eclectic lineup. It’s my favorite spot for an evening of listening enjoyment and discovery.

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♦ Before making final plans, we suggest you call the venue to confirm ticket availability, dates and times, as schedules are subject to change.
♦ NYCity, with a population of  8.5 million, had a record 56 million visitors last year and is TripAdvisor’s Traveler’s Choice Top U.S. Destination for 2015.  Quality shows draw crowds. Try to reserve seats in advance, even if just on day of performance.
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WHAT’S ON VIEW
My Fave Special Exhibitions – MUSEUMS / Manhattan’s Fifth Avenue
(See the New York Times Arts Section for listings of all museum exhibitions,
and also see the expanded reviews of these exhibitions)

Metropolitan Museum of Art:
‘Reimagining Modernism: 1900-1950’ (continuing)
One of the greatest encyclopedic museums in the world fulfills its mission a little more with an ambitious reinstallation of works of early European modernism with their American counterparts for the first time in nearly 30 years. Objects of design and paintings by a few self-taught artists further the integration. It is quite a sight, with interesting rotations and fine-tunings to come. 212-535-7710, metmuseum.org.” (Smith)

‘Fatal Attraction: Piotr Uklanski Photographs’ (through Aug. 16)
A small but succinct survey of the multimedia bad-boy artist’s polymorphous relationship to photography shows him constantly changing scale, film and printing methods while exploring the medium’s ability to startle, seduce and become generic. He appropriates, imitates and pays homage as he goes, regularly invoking his Polish roots. Don’t miss the large photo-banners in the museum’s Great Hall or the massive fiber-sculpture monument to the eye and to insatiable looking. 212-535-7710, metmuseum.org. (Smith)

Neue Galerie:
‘Egon Schiele: Portraits’ (through Sept. 07)
zakovsek_1“Of the approximately 125 items in this terrific show, there are only 11 oil paintings, which is a good thing. Except for a large picture of his wife, Edith, in a colorful striped dress, Schiele’s works on canvas are dark and turgid. But his drawings are nimble and nuanced. Working on paper with pencil, charcoal, ink, gouache, watercolor and crayons, he portrayed himself and others with infectious avidity. There’s hardly a single sheet here that doesn’t warrant close looking for its virtuoso draftsmanship and psychological acuity. 1048 Fifth Avenue, at 86th Street, 212-628-6200, neuegalerie.org. “(Johnson)

Guggenheim Museum:
Kandinsky Before Abstraction, 1901–1911 (through spring 2015)
ex_Kandinsky_Landscape-near-Murnau-with-Locomotive_490Early in his career Vasily Kandinsky experimented with printmaking, produced brightly-colored landscapes of the German countryside, and explored recognizable and recurrent motifs. This intimate exhibition drawn from the Guggenheim collection explores the artist’s representational origins.

El Museo del Barrio:
‘Under the Mexican Sky: Gabriel Figueroa, Art and Film’ (through June 27)
Painting with light is one way to define the cinematographer’s task, and it describes the art of Gabriel Figueroa (1907-1997), who worked with some of the leading international film directors of his time and was a national hero in his native Mexico, the supreme painter-in-light of Mexicanidad. How do you put this particular kind of art across in a museum — art that is as much about time as it is about material, as much about flux as it is about fixity? This show, which mixes Figueroa film clips with paintings and prints by some of Mexico’s greatest artists and in the process utterly transforms El Museo’s interior spaces, gives an enthralling answer. 1230 Fifth Avenue, at 104th Street, East Harlem, 212-831-7272, elmuseo.org. (Cotter)

Cooper Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum (continuing):
rendering-3The stately doors of the 1902 Andrew Carnegie mansion, home to the Cooper Hewitt, are open again after an overhaul and expansion of the premises. Historic house and modern museum have always made an awkward fit, a standoff between preservation and innovation, and the problem remains, but the renovation has brought a wide-open new gallery space, a cafe and a raft of be-your-own-designer digital enhancements. Best of all, more of the museum’s vast permanent collection is now on view, including an Op Art weaving, miniature spiral staircases, ballistic face masks and a dainty enameled 18th-century version of a Swiss knife. Like design itself, this institution is built on tumult and friction, and you feel it. 2 East 91st Street, at Fifth Avenue, 212-849-8400, cooperhewitt.org. (Cotter)

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Museum Mile is a section of Fifth Avenue which contains one of the densest displays of culture in the world. Eight museums can be found along this section of Fifth Avenue:

• 105th Street – El Museo del Barrio (closed Sun-Mon)*
• 103rd Street – Museum of the City of New York (open 7 days /week)
•  92nd Street – The Jewish Museum (closed Wed) (Sat FREE) (Thu 5-8 PWYW)
•  91st Street  –  Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum (open 7 days /week)
•  89th Street –  National Academy Museum (closed Mon-Tue)
•  88th Street –  Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum (closed Thu) (Sat 6-8 PWYW)
•  86th Street –  Neue Galerie New York (closed Tue-Wed) (Fri 6-8 FREE)
Last, but certainly not least, America’s premier museum
•  82nd Street – The Metropolitan Museum of Art (open 7 days /week)*
*always Pay What You Wish (PWYW)

Although technically not part of the Museum Mile, the Frick Collection (closed Mon) (SUN 11am-1pm PWYW) on the corner of 70th St. and Fifth Avenue and the The Morgan Library & Museum (closed Mon) (Fri 7-9 FREE) on Madison Ave and 37th St are also located near Fifth Ave.
Now plan your own museum crawl (info on hours & admission updated June 2, 2015). ========================================================

For other selected Museum and Gallery Special Exhibitions see Recent Posts in right Sidebar dated 06/18 and 06/16.
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